What is Video Conferencing?
Video conferencing uses telecommunications of audio and video to bring
people at different sites together for a meeting. This can be as simple
as a conversation between two people in private offices (point-to-point)
or involve several sites (multi-point) with more than one person in large
rooms at different sites. Besides the audio and visual transmission of
people, video conferencing can be used to share documents, computer-displayed
information, and whiteboards. Improvements are being made in collaborative
tools that allow people at different sites to electronically manipulate
a common document or computer application.
IEEE standards guide the development of video conferencing. The H.320
standard describes how video conferencing operates over ISDN telephone
circuits (The ISDN communications standard specifies how a single wire
or optical fiber can carry voice, digital network services, and video.
Typically, an ISDN circuit has more bandwidth than a regular analog telephone
circuit.) H.323 describes how video conferencing operates over the Internet
(TCP/IP or just IP). Multipoint Conferencing Units (MCUs) handle the traffic
flow in multi-point video conferences and typically include gateway capabilities
to bridge H.320 and H.323 sites together in a conference.
The quality of a video conference primarily depends on the characteristics
of the circuit between the conferencing sites. In the H.323 world, a high-quality
conference (excellent audio and video) needs about 768Kbs (KiloBits/Second)
of bandwidth. On campus, this is usually possible since most data connections
are at least 10Mbs (MegaBits/Second). It’s also possible when the
other sites have Internet 2 capabilities (the next-generation Internet
which is in use at virtually all R1 research universities and some business
and government sites).
When a conversation includes a site off-campus, then bandwidth and type
of connection between campus and the other site must be considered. If
this path travels across the commodity Internet, then you are at the mercy
of the activity on this public utility at the time of the conversation.
Here are some general rules of thumb for bandwidth:
|
Bandwidth Use |
| 768 Kbs |
On campus or another Internet 2 site (excellent quality) |
| 384 Kbs |
Maximum good connection across the commodity Internet (IP) or through
an ISDN connection |
| 256 Kbs |
Audio OK; video barely full-motion (not smooth); use only if 384
Kbs not possible |
| 128 Kbs |
Audio marginal; not full-motion video; use only if 256 Kbs not possible |
ISDN or IP? If you have a choice of having an ISDN versus an IP connection
with the off-campus site, you have two issues to consider: quality and
cost. In many cases, there will be additional charges (for you or the
site you are connecting to) for ISDN. In general, there are no additional
charges for IP (based on the current funding model for data connections
on campus). You will get consistent quality with an ISDN connection, but
over the commodity Internet you do not have guaranteed bandwidth (i.e.,
quality). Do a test video conference well before the actual session to
validate your choice.
|